• The Second Cut

    And just like that, it’s eight years later.

    Every September I pay WordPress to keep this blog alive. Just in case I remember who I am. I imagine all the time that this will be the day that I start writing again, and I think about this very post.

    I’d said I’d devote time to the blog when I finished my thesis, but it turns out I have quite a bit more to say. The good news, and the bad news, is that I have no pressure. Many moons ago I had a front row seat to my dear friend Valarie’s struggle to craft her dissertation. Months passed as she painted her loft 50 shades of putty, stone, and sand in a writing process best described as “understood only by her.” I remember her late-night phone call in a panic because her advisor had asked for a “compendium” before the days of Google. I listened, I encouraged, but there was no way at the time I could understand the crippling anxiety that accompanies creating a culminating academic document. She did, of course, finish and is now a remarkably successful leader in biotech. I, too, will see this through to completion. I learned straight from the mouth of the phenomenal Tina McElroy Ansa that, “Thinking time is writing time.” The energy expended mentally wrestling with your work is indeed an integral part of the process. Unfortunately, however, it produces little in the way of tangible results. I would have three PhDs by now if thinking time yielded one page per hour.

    It is a bit like breathing for me, this putting pen to paper, or more accurately, sitting in front of a computer screen, fingers poised and anxious above the keys, waiting to weave the story that only I can tell. But really, eight years?

    I’ve been healing. I don’t know about you, but the COVID years almost took me out. Not literally, but the isolation of it all was very difficult for me. Coupled with the time it took to process the burnout I experienced from my former life, and the loss that accompanied walking away from it, the last 8 years have been some of the toughest in my life. But the more time passes, the clearer the road becomes in both directions; both what I’ve survived and where I’m headed. My job is to stay the course and write it all down.

    I have also been busy. There was coursework in everything from Shakespeare to Literary Theory to graduate-level Spanish. And oh, the papers. I needed that time to explore and regain some control over my life, and I wanted to prove to myself that I hadn’t merely used to be smart. Graduate school is profoundly destabilizing. Every day you question your motivation and your sanity. Has it been worth it? I’m not sure, mostly because I’m not done yet. But I do know that graduate school and writing this thesis in particular have shaped the way I think about the stories that we inherit, that we tell ourselves, and the ones I will pass down. The journey has made me a more careful writer and thinker. For that I am grateful.

    So here I am. Still. Not exactly where I left off, but somewhere close enough to begin again.

  • On Middle Age

    I went to see Kendrick Lamar a couple of years ago. It was a smaller venue so I’d jumped through some hoops to pay a lot of money for a ticket. In line for the show, I chatted with two very cute Black guys who I gleaned to be college students based on our conversation. I turned back and the line began to move, and I overheard one whisper to the other “I didn’t know Kendrick had so many middle-aged fans!” Spoken as clear as a bell to the back of my head. I feigned indignation and explained that a) I am not that old and b) he could have whispered. As I walked in the door, one of them called out “When are your office hours? “

    I gave him the finger.

    PS I fainted halfway through said show due to dehydration due to all the sweating from all the jumping and enjoying a concert the EXACT same way I always have.

    It’s with great humility that I confess and embrace my Middle Age, emotionally, conceptually, physically, and mentally. Literally, perhaps, should I be lucky enough to live to be 96. I have home and purse Zantac and Tagamet. Yes, both. The day I discovered Aspercreme, I actually looked up the Facebook page to follow. I talk to people over the top of my glasses. I’m now using a different extra hydrating Estee Lauder Night serum. Yes, hindsight is 20/20, and I’m embracing and confessing, but frankly, I’m still a little shocked.

    Concerts are my thing. I worked my entire 20’s in record stores. It’s all in the music, but I now appreciate the creative process in a way that I couldn’t when I was younger. How could I have? Jay-Z is a whole different thing, now. He really is The Blueprint. We’ve watched him navigate his road to manhood, changing and morphing and growing up much the same way that we, his mid-40s fans can relate to(minus the billionaire part and being married to Beyonce.) Nothing about life at middle age is at all the same anymore. Nothing is the way any of us expected it to be. Shawn Carter maintains the discipline and focus it takes to stay relevant as a poet over decades. Watching him allow himself to be vulnerable to the creative process was a catalyst for me deciding to go to graduate school. Philips Arena was mesmerized by him, alone on the stage with THOUSANDS watching, spanning the age, color, race, attire spectrums. It’s about the words. We were all there because of his words and hard work. I seriously saw a woman who looked just like Betty White in line buying a 4:44 hoodie.

    PS I threw my back out at that show after standing so long in shoes I hadn’t properly broken in and my left leg has been numb ever since.

    I found myself unexpectedly unemployed early last year. As you can imagine, I had to be very careful with my spending until the dust settled. I got a text from my StubHub app that read “You’re not going to miss Radiohead, are you?” I kid you not. I took it as a sign from God.

    I saw Radiohead first when Pablo Honey was released, at Masquerade Music Park. Mazzy Star opened. They were the two most lethargic groups on a stage I’d ever seen, and I believe she ran off the stage crying because the crowd yelled: “We can’t hear you!” There, I fell in love with Radiohead and the tinge of sadness. The layers were subtle but there. I saw the OK Computer tour at the Masquerade in 1997 but hadn’t seen them since then because drunk kids ruined their shows for me for a few years.

    As God commanded, I went to the Radiohead concert in April. I couldn’t even afford a beer, and it will go down as one of the best nights of my life. I remember looking up and saying a prayer of thanks. I was connected with the people around me during a time when I couldn’t quite feel the bottom beneath my feet. Concerts give me the same feeling as football games. In concert, with crowds of people, you share in a singular event that’s personal and different for each person there. In that moment, those moments, “this that is happening” on that stage or on that field, is all that matters. I didn’t think about my bills, I didn’t think about my kid, I didn’t worry about anything at all.

    I decided then and there to get a tattoo: “Buy the concert ticket.” I want a spiral right behind my ear. I promised myself that I’d touch it whenever I was in doubt.

    PS From what my doctor and I can gather, the Radiohead concert was probably where I first pulled the tendon in my hip which led to the issues at Jay-Z. I’m starting physical therapy next week.

    PPS No, I don’t know how I pulled a tendon at a Radiohead concert.

    PPS No, I haven’t gotten the tattoo.

  • On Barbra.

    On Barbra.

    Happy Thanksgiving Eve, or as I prefer to call it “Barbra: The Music…The Mem’ries…The Magic,” Day. I woke to an alert from Netflix, made coffee and settled in. My friend Yolanda and I saw her in Florida last December. We’ve been Barbra fans since 3rdgrade when our favorite singers were Michael Jackson and Barry Manilow. Yentl made her cry. For real. I had to hold her hand at the show during “Papa Can you Hear me.” She lost her shit.

    For me, it’s the Barbraness. The diva, the voice, and her decades of #1 albums. I live for costume changes and big fans simulating the wind! Sammy and Bernie and John, were there, all adoring her and supporting her on her last tour. Because Barbra. She knows her voice and what it does.  She’s mastered it. She has insisted on complete control of her creative life. I love her simple hair, the diamond studs, the acrylic nail manicures, and the fact that although she hovers a bit above us all, she has a weakness for ice cream and jokes with ease about aging. She doesn’t seem to take herself too seriously. I want to be as comfortable in my skin as she is in hers.

    I went extra sparkly for Barbra. It’s Barbara, and it’s always nice to have an occasional opportunity to get sparkly. I wore embroidered taffeta and satin heels, we played Barbra all day in preparation. I even picked up a ribbon trimmed cape. Because Barbra.

    We splurged for floor seat and floated in like princesses. We felt very pretty. It was easily one of the top 3 shows I’ve ever seen. Her appreciation for the drama needed for her last tour wasn’t just for her but for us too. She didn’t disappoint. I adore a costume change AND an intermission. Scenes from her movies appeared larger than life behind her as she introduced each song. It was less a concert than the Barbra experience.

    But.

    After the 5th time someone told us how cute we were, we couldn’t tell if we felt condescended to or if we’d tripped into some sort of Barbra sisterhood, but that feeling from us instinctively sitting together nearly 40 years ago resurfaced. We both have a lot of experience being the only black person wherever, and it’s often hard to tell if you’re being laughed at or with. I got so tired of saying “No, we’re not sisters,” that I avoided returning eye contact and speaking to people after a while. It’s not as easy to accept as it used to be, and I can only attribute it to the fact that we all grow and change. Soon, the backdrop appeared for Yentl, and tears came to Yolanda’s eyes. We both decided it doesn’t really matter without saying anything in that moment. We just enjoyed Barbra.

    We also stayed up until 2:00 AM talking about it…

    …Then again the following Monday after my boss’s wife asked me why in the world I’d go to a Barbara Streisand concert because she thought I like rap music.